Location:

Harvard Law School, Hauser Hall Rm. 104

“How to Publish an Article: A Panel on the Craft of Law and History”

Presenting on the panel will be Deborah Gershenowitz, Senior Editor for American and Latin American History, Cambridge University Press and Steven Schaus, Articles Committee Co-Chair, Harvard Law Review. Moderated by Tomiko-Brown Nagin, Daniel P.S. Paul...

Location:

Sheer room, Fay House, 10 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA

Leading members from the Oneida Nation, Citizen Potawatomi Nation, and United Houma Nation of Louisiana will discuss vital issues of tribal citizenship in Indian Country. By exploring topics such as constitutional reform, tribal enrollment, blood quantum, and descendancy, the speakers will discuss the many different ways Native tribes and nations define, grant, and express indigenous citizenship.

This program is cosponsored by the Harvard University Native American Program and the Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development’s Honoring Nations program.

Location:

Location:

1730 Cambridge St, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA

This year marks the 50th anniversary of the establishment of Ukrainian studies at Harvard University. To celebrate this milestone, HURI will hold a two-day commemorative conference at Harvard on May 11-12, 2018. The conference is free and open to the public.

Location:

Adolphus Busch Hall, Goldman Room, 27 Kirkland Street, Cambridge, MA

Brandon BlochPhD Student in History and Graduate Student Affiliate, CES, Harvard University

Brandon Bloch will present a chapter of his dissertation which follows the role of Protestant intellectuals in the transformation of West German public opinion on Europe's postwar territorial settlement and West German reconciliation with Eastern Europe from the mid-1950s through the mid-1960s. In 1965, a commission of the German Protestant Church issued a memorandum calling on the West German...